• Vaccine · Oct 2009

    Comparative Study

    The cost-effectiveness of rotavirus vaccination: Comparative analyses for five European countries and transferability in Europe.

    • Mark Jit, Joke Bilcke, Marie-Josée J Mangen, Heini Salo, Hugues Melliez, W John Edmunds, Yazdanpanah Yazdan, and Philippe Beutels.
    • Health Economics Unit, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom. m.jit@bham.ac.uk
    • Vaccine. 2009 Oct 19; 27 (44): 6121-8.

    AbstractCost-effectiveness analyses are usually not directly comparable between countries because of differences in analytical and modelling assumptions. We investigated the cost-effectiveness of rotavirus vaccination in five European Union countries (Belgium, England and Wales, Finland, France and the Netherlands) using a single model, burden of disease estimates supplied by national public health agencies and a subset of common assumptions. Under base case assumptions (vaccination with Rotarix, 3% discount rate, health care provider perspective, no herd immunity and quality of life of one caregiver affected by a rotavirus episode) and a cost-effectiveness threshold of euro30,000, vaccination is likely to be cost effective in Finland only. However, single changes to assumptions may make it cost effective in Belgium and the Netherlands. The estimated threshold price per dose for Rotarix (excluding administration costs) to be cost effective was euro41 in Belgium, euro28 in England and Wales, euro51 in Finland, euro36 in France and euro46 in the Netherlands.

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